Monday, August 19, 2019
Intellectual Property and the Future of the Music Industry Essay
Corruption, Conscience, and Copyright: The Current State of Intellectual Property and the Future of the Music Industry ââ¬Å"Todayââ¬â¢s pirates operate not on the high seas but on the Internet, in illegal CD factories, distribution centers, and on the street. The pirateââ¬â¢s credo is still the same--why pay for it when itââ¬â¢s so easy to steal? The credo is as wrong as it ever was. Stealing is still illegal, unethical, and all too frequent in todayââ¬â¢s digital age. That is why RIAA [Recording Industry Association of America] continues to fight music piracy.â⬠ââ¬â RIAA.com The human conscience is a powerful tool. And if you are like most Americans, you probably consider yourself to be a rather moral person, at least based upon your own morality, your own conscience. Chances are, however, that you have engaged in some form of illegal activity during your life: speeding down a familiar road, jaywalking across an empty street, driving with a broken blinker. Assuming you consider yourself to be of high moral stature, how does your conscience reconcile this? The answer: the unlawful does not always imply the unethical, and that which is illegal is not necessarily immoral. Since the digital revolution in the 1990ââ¬â¢s, the downloading of copyrighted music has skyrocketed. The Recording Industry Association of America, RIAA, has denounced music piracy, claiming that it is both illegal and immoral. And they drive a hard bargain, arguing the following: 1. Downloading music is against the law. 2. Downloading music betrays the songwriters and recording artists who create it. 3. Downloading music stifles the careers of new artists and up-and-coming bands. 4. Downloading music threatens the livelihood of the thousands of working people who are em... ...ec_39_00000201----000-.html Blackburn, David. On-line Piracy and Recorded Music Sales. Dec. 2004. http://www.katallaxi.se/grejer/blackburn/blackburn_fs.pdf CD Baby. Who/What are we? http://cdbaby.com/about Holahan, Catherine. Downloading Musicââ¬â¢s New Deal. Business Week Online. Oct. 31, 2006. p8-8, 1p. Leach, Eric and Henslee, Bill. Follow the Money: Who's Really Making the Dough? Nov. 1, 2001. http://emusician.com/mag/emusic_follow_money_whos/index.html Lessig, Lawrence. The Limits of Copyright. June 19, 2000. http://www.lessig.org/content/standard/0,1902,16071,00.html McCourt, Tom, and Burkart, Patrick. When Creators, Corporations and Consumers Collide: Napster and the Development of On-line Music Distribution. 2003. Sage Publications. Music United. Why You Shouldn't Do It. http://www.musicunited.org/4_shouldntdoit.html
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